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NEW YORK — Every other player walked into Madison Square Garden Sunday night looking dapper in a suit.

Not Anthony Stolarz.

The lanky goalie was in a Lehigh Valley Phantoms hoodie and nylon workout pants. Thanks to two different viruses taking out both of the Flyers’ goalies, Stolarz was the starter Sunday night.

Stolarz had to rush from Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania to Philadelphia Saturday night and didn’t have time to take dress clothes. Steve Mason was too sick to dress that game — a stomach virus came fast and furious — and a chest cold hit Michal Neuvirth so hard that he passed out in the goal crease, collapsing on the ice in the first period against the New Jersey Devils.

“Just seeing him as he went off the ice communicating and responding, the reports from there seemed to be heading in the right direction,” coach Dave Hakstol said. “That’s your first concern when you see a player in that situation.”

It’s not just one thing going around the Flyers’ locker room these days. Multiple bugs have several players feeling less than their best and Neuvirth’s case was the most extreme.

After he collapsed he was taken off the ice on a stretcher and transported to the University of Pennsylvania Hospital, where he stayed the night. Sunday he was discharged and test results were normal.

He did not accompany the Flyers to New York, instead staying home to rest.

“I know he’s doing well, which is a great sign,” said Patrik Stefan, Neuvirth’s agent. “Obviously he’s gonna do some more tests (Monday) to make sure it was related to something, dehydration or the illness that he was battling through for the last couple of days.”

Stefan watched the game on television, and like nearly everyone else, he didn’t notice Neuvirth fall at first. Pierre-Edouard Bellemare saw it out of the corner of his eye and jumped out onto the ice to try to stop play and get medics to his goalie as quick as possible.

“I was amazed at the response from the players,” Stefan said, “how they acted and obviously the Flyers organization and doctors were so alert and that says a lot about the organization and the team and the players.”

Players said they knew Neuvirth was dealing with some kind of illness. Hextall said Sunday that Neuvirth’s sinuses were clogged, which likely played a role in his losing consciousness on the ice and needing medical attention.

“Neutral zone faceoff and then I got a little dizzy,” Neuvirth told Hextall.

That was it.

Ironically, Neuvirth was on the ice in a similar situation back in 2010. Atlanta Thrashers goalie Ondrej Pavelec, a Czech Republic native like both Neuvirth and Stefan, collapsed on the ice and was later diagnosed with a neuro cardiogenic syncope episode, essentially a fainting event.

Neuvirth’s case is apparently not as strange, just a sickness that will pass.

“I’m not a doctor, but all the tests came back normal and that’s all that you’re looking for,” Hextall said. “Other than that you’re saying, ‘OK, something freak happened and otherwise we’re good.’

“I’ve had a sinus infection for a month and a half now. You guys have probably had it, too. We all have different things. If guys didn’t play every time they had a little sniffle, we probably wouldn’t have many players through the whole year. We’d probably have about a dozen every night.”

Neuvirth, 29, was inked to a two-year contract extension by the Flyers on March 1. It’s unclear what his status is for the remainder of the Flyers’ season or how much time he’ll need to recover.

The Flyers had a one-goal lead when Neuvirth collapsed on the ice. A couple shifts after play resumed and he was en route to the hospital, they added another and found the energy to play on to a 3-0 win.

Even though they kept the game going, players on both teams had trouble focusing after witnessing a situation the left so many questions.

“It’s terrifying,” Devils forward Blake Coleman said. “That’s kind of a moment where hockey comes second. I hope that he’s doing okay. I haven’t heard much about it. It’s always scary to see anybody collapse like that. That’s when hockey kind of gets on the backburner. Everybody’s on the same team there.”

“I’m sure there is a few things that were related,” Hextall added. “Dehydration is something that affects the body in funny ways. I’m sure when you’re sick, hydration is usually an issue. It’s probably something that was probably in there.”